vote up 8 vote down star
5

I wanted to bring this challenege to the attention of the stackoverflow community. The original problem and answers are here. BTW, if you did not follow it before, you should try to read Eric's blog, it is pure wisdom.

Summary:

Write a function that takes a non-null IEnumerable and returns a string with the following characteristics:

  1. If the sequence is empty the resulting string is "{}".
  2. If the sequence is a single item "ABC" then the resulting string is "{ABC}".
  3. If the sequence is the two item sequence "ABC", "DEF" then the resulting string is "{ABC and DEF}".
  4. If the sequence has more than two items, say, "ABC", "DEF", "G", "H" then the resulting string is "{ABC, DEF, G and H}". (Note: no Oxford comma!)

As you can see even our very own Jon Skeet (yes, it is well known that he can be in two places at the same time) has posted a solution but his (IMHO) is not the most elegant although probably you can not beat its performance.

What do you think? There are pretty good options there. I really like one of the solutions that involves the select and aggregate methods (from Fernando Nicolet). Linq is very powerful and dedicating some time to challenges like this make you learn a lot. I twisted it a bit so it is a bit more performant and clear (by using Count and avoiding Reverse):

    public static string CommaQuibbling(IEnumerable<string> items)
    {

        int last = items.Count() - 1;
        Func<int, string> getSeparator = (i) => i == 0 ? string.Empty : (i == last ? " and " : ", ");
        string answer = string.Empty;

        return "{" + items.Select((s, i) => new { Index = i, Value = s })
                          .Aggregate(answer, (s, a) => s + getSeparator(a.Index) + a.Value) + "}";

    }
flag

56% accept rate
5  
community wiki? – Sam Saffron Apr 25 at 9:00
Note that using Count instead of Reverse won't necessarily improve performance: If the string collection doesn't implement ICollection then Count will need to iterate through it entirely. – Luke Apr 26 at 10:56
Let me get it correctly wasn't this question supposed to identify best "LINQ" way of solving problem rather then trivial procedural way of using an enumerator ?? – Akash Kava Apr 27 at 15:55
The author of the original challenge said: "I am particularly interested in solutions which make the semantics of the code very clear to the code maintainer". In my opinion, some of the higher votes violates that. Yes they are clever and perform well, but I find them hard to read. – Thomas Eyde Apr 30 at 17:34

17 Answers

vote up 16 vote down check

How about this approach? Purely cumulative - no back-tracking, and only iterates once. For raw performance, I'm not sure you'll do better with LINQ etc, regardless of how "pretty" a LINQ answer might be.

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Text;

static class Program
{
    public static string CommaQuibbling(IEnumerable<string> items)
    {
        StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder('{');
        using (var iter = items.GetEnumerator())
        {
            if (iter.MoveNext())
            { // first item can be appended directly
                sb.Append(iter.Current);
                if (iter.MoveNext())
                { // more than one; only add each
                  // term when we know there is another
                    string lastItem = iter.Current;
                    while (iter.MoveNext())
                    { // middle term; use ", "
                        sb.Append(", ").Append(lastItem);
                        lastItem = iter.Current;
                    }
                    // add the final term; since we are on at least the
                    // second term, always use " and "
                    sb.Append(" and ").Append(lastItem);
                }
            }
        }
        return sb.Append('}').ToString();
    }
    static void Main()
    {
        Console.WriteLine(CommaQuibbling(new string[] { }));
        Console.WriteLine(CommaQuibbling(new string[] { "ABC" }));
        Console.WriteLine(CommaQuibbling(new string[] { "ABC", "DEF" }));
        Console.WriteLine(CommaQuibbling(new string[] {
             "ABC", "DEF", "G", "H" }));
    }
}
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Did you have anything special in mind when you wrote "new StringBuilder().Append('{')", which was changed by Peter Wone? – VVS Apr 25 at 16:49
No; the change is fine. – Marc Gravell Apr 25 at 20:54
Whenever I do this sort of thing it ends up looking so much like Mark's solution that one little code tweak was all there was left for me to say. – Peter Wone Apr 25 at 22:03
Is sb.Append(", ").Append(lastItem) cheaper than sb.AppendFormat(", {0}", lastItem) ? – Peter Wone Apr 25 at 22:08
@Peter: yes.... it doesn't have to parse the format string ", {0}" - it is just two virtual calls. Internally, the parsing will do a lot more work, and probably still call the exact same 2 methods. – Marc Gravell Apr 26 at 7:49
show 2 more comments
vote up 7 vote down

Inefficient, but I think clear.

public static string CommaQuibbling(IEnumerable<string> items)
{
    List<String> list = new List<string>(items);
    if (list.Count == 0) { return "{}"; }
    if (list.Count == 1) { return "{" + list[0] + "}"; }
    String[] initial = list.GetRange(0, list.Count - 1).ToArray();
    return "{" + String.Join(", ", initial) + " and " + list[list.Count - 1] + "}";
}

If I was maintaining the code, I'd prefer this to more clever versions.

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This is so much better than all the answers above it. I guess not many SO users read Eric's blog - he put emphasis on a readable solution. That's why this one is the best. – Paul Batum Apr 27 at 12:12
vote up 4 vote down

If I was doing a lot with streams which required first/last information, I'd have thid extension:

[Flags]
public enum StreamPosition
{
   First = 1, Last = 2
}

public static IEnumerable<R> MapWithPositions<T, R> (this IEnumerable<T> stream, 
    Func<StreamPosition, T, R> map)
{
    using (var enumerator = stream.GetEnumerator ())
    {
        if (!enumerator.MoveNext ()) yield break ;

        var cur   = enumerator.Current   ;
        var flags = StreamPosition.First ;
        while (true)
        {
            if (!enumerator.MoveNext ()) flags |= StreamPosition.Last ;
            yield return map (flags, cur) ;
            if ((flags & StreamPosition.Last) != 0) yield break ;
            cur   = enumerator.Current ;
            flags = 0 ;
        }
    }
}

Then the simplest (not the quickest, that would need a couple more handy extension methods) solution will be:

public static string Quibble (IEnumerable<string> strings)
{
    return "{" + String.Join ("", strings.MapWithPositions ((pos, item) => (
       (pos &  StreamPosition.First) != 0      ? "" : 
        pos == StreamPosition.Last   ? " and " : ", ") + item)) + "}" ;
}
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Cool idea. Makes the solution quite simple. I wonder what the performance would be like. – Daniel Fortunov Apr 25 at 10:16
+1 Elegant, concise, clear. It's not a question of "pretty" or "clever", it's about clarity of purpose and extent of effect. – Peter Wone Apr 25 at 10:25
Since JIT doesn't optimize methods returning value types until quite recent versions of .NET, the above change should have better performance. – Anton Tykhyy Apr 25 at 10:28
vote up 1 vote down

Disclaimer: I used this as an excuse to play around with new technologies, so my solutions don't really live up to the Eric's original demands for clarity and maintainability.

Naive Enumerator Solution

(I concede that the foreach variant of this is superior, as it doesn't require manually messing about with the enumerator.)

public static string NaiveConcatenate(IEnumerable<string> sequence)
{
    StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
    sb.Append('{');

    IEnumerator<string> enumerator = sequence.GetEnumerator();

    if (enumerator.MoveNext())
    {
        string a = enumerator.Current;
        if (!enumerator.MoveNext())
        {
            sb.Append(a);
        }
        else
        {
            string b = enumerator.Current;
            while (enumerator.MoveNext())
            {
                sb.Append(a);
                sb.Append(", ");
                a = b;
                b = enumerator.Current;
            }
            sb.AppendFormat("{0} and {1}", a, b);
        }
    }

    sb.Append('}');
    return sb.ToString();
}

Solution Using LINQ

public static string ConcatenateWithLinq(IEnumerable<string> sequence)
{
    return (from item in sequence select item)
        .Aggregate(
        new {sb = new StringBuilder("{"), a = (string) null, b = (string) null},
        (s, x) =>
            {
                if (s.a != null)
                {
                    s.sb.Append(s.a);
                    s.sb.Append(", ");
                }
                return new {s.sb, a = s.b, b = x};
            },
        (s) =>
            {
                if (s.b != null)
                    if (s.a != null)
                        s.sb.AppendFormat("{0} and {1}", s.a, s.b);
                    else
                        s.sb.Append(s.b);
                s.sb.Append("}");
                return s.sb.ToString();
            });
}

Solution with TPL

This solution uses a producer-consumer queue to feed the input sequence to the processor, whilst keeping at least two elements buffered in the queue. Once the producer has reached the end of the input sequence, the last two elements can be processed with special treatment.

In hindsight there is no reason to have the consumer operate asynchronously, which would eliminate the need for a concurrent queue, but as I said previously, I was just using this as an excuse to play around with new technologies :-)

public static string ConcatenateWithTpl(IEnumerable<string> sequence)
{
    var queue = new ConcurrentQueue<string>();
    bool stop = false;

    var consumer = Future.Create(
        () =>
            {
                var sb = new StringBuilder("{");
                while (!stop || queue.Count > 2)
                {
                    string s;
                    if (queue.Count > 2 && queue.TryDequeue(out s))
                        sb.AppendFormat("{0}, ", s);
                }
                return sb;
            });

    // Producer
    foreach (var item in sequence)
        queue.Enqueue(item);

    stop = true;
    StringBuilder result = consumer.Value;

    string a;
    string b;

    if (queue.TryDequeue(out a))
        if (queue.TryDequeue(out b))
            result.AppendFormat("{0} and {1}", a, b);
        else
            result.Append(a);

    result.Append("}");
    return result.ToString();
}

Unit tests elided for brevity.

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vote up 1 vote down

Here's mine, but I realize it's pretty much like Marc's, some minor differences in the order of things, and I added unit-tests as well.

using System;
using NUnit.Framework;
using NUnit.Framework.Extensions;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Text;
using NUnit.Framework.SyntaxHelpers;

namespace StringChallengeProject
{
    [TestFixture]
    public class StringChallenge
    {
        [RowTest]
        [Row(new String[] { }, "{}")]
        [Row(new[] { "ABC" }, "{ABC}")]
        [Row(new[] { "ABC", "DEF" }, "{ABC and DEF}")]
        [Row(new[] { "ABC", "DEF", "G", "H" }, "{ABC, DEF, G and H}")]
        public void Test(String[] input, String expectedOutput)
        {
            Assert.That(FormatString(input), Is.EqualTo(expectedOutput));
        }

        //codesnippet:93458590-3182-11de-8c30-0800200c9a66
        public static String FormatString(IEnumerable<String> input)
        {
            if (input == null)
                return "{}";

            using (var iterator = input.GetEnumerator())
            {
                // Guard-clause for empty source
                if (!iterator.MoveNext())
                    return "{}";

                // Take care of first value
                var output = new StringBuilder();
                output.Append('{').Append(iterator.Current);

                // Grab next
                if (iterator.MoveNext())
                {
                    // Grab the next value, but don't process it
                    // we don't know whether to use comma or "and"
                    // until we've grabbed the next after it as well
                    String nextValue = iterator.Current;
                    while (iterator.MoveNext())
                    {
                        output.Append(", ");
                        output.Append(nextValue);

                        nextValue = iterator.Current;
                    }

                    output.Append(" and ");
                    output.Append(nextValue);
                }


                output.Append('}');
                return output.ToString();
            }
        }
    }
}
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vote up 1 vote down

Here's a simple F# solution, that only does one forward iteration:

let CommaQuibble items =
    let sb = System.Text.StringBuilder("{")
    // pp is 2 previous, p is previous
    let pp,p = items |> Seq.fold (fun (pp:string option,p) s -> 
        if pp <> None then
            sb.Append(pp.Value).Append(", ") |> ignore
        (p, Some(s))) (None,None)
    if pp <> None then
        sb.Append(pp.Value).Append(" and ") |> ignore
    if p <> None then
        sb.Append(p.Value) |> ignore
    sb.Append("}").ToString()

(EDIT: Turns out this is very similar to Skeet's.)

The test code:

let Test l =
    printfn "%s" (CommaQuibble l)

Test []
Test ["ABC"]        
Test ["ABC";"DEF"]        
Test ["ABC";"DEF";"G"]        
Test ["ABC";"DEF";"G";"H"]        
Test ["ABC";null;"G";"H"]
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vote up 1 vote down

I quite liked Jon's answer, but that's because it's much like how I approached the problem. Rather than specifically coding in the two variables, I implemented them inside of a FIFO queue.

It's strange because I just assumed that there would be 15 posts that all did exactly the same thing, but it looks like we were the only two to do it that way. Oh, looking at these answers, Marc Gravell's answer is quite close to the approach we used as well, but he's using two 'loops', rather than holding on to values.

But all those answers with LINQ and regex and joining arrays just seem like crazy-talk! :-)

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I'm a fan of the serial comma: I eat, shoot, and leave.

I continually need a solution to this problem and have solved it in 3 languages (though not C#). I would adapt the following solution (in Lua, does not wrap answer in curly braces) by writing a concat method that works on any IEnumerable:

function commafy(t, andword)
  andword = andword or 'and'
  local n = #t -- number of elements in the numeration
  if n == 1 then
    return t[1]
  elseif n == 2 then
    return concat { t[1], ' ', andword, ' ', t[2] }
  else
    local last = t[n]
    t[n] = andword .. ' ' .. t[n]
    local answer = concat(t, ', ')
    t[n] = last
    return answer
  end
end
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vote up 1 vote down

Another variant - separating punctuation and iteration logic for the sake of code clarity. And still thinking about perfomrance.

Works as requested with pure IEnumerable/string/ and strings in the list cannot be null.

public static string Concat(IEnumerable<string> strings)
{
    return "{" + strings.reduce("", (acc, prev, cur, next) => 
               acc.Append(punctuation(prev, cur, next)).Append(cur)) + "}";
}
private static string punctuation(string prev, string cur, string next)
{
	if (null == prev || null == cur)
		return "";
	if (null == next)
		return " and ";
	return ", ";
}

private static string reduce(this IEnumerable<string> strings, 
    string acc, Func<StringBuilder, string, string, string, StringBuilder> func)
{
	if (null == strings) return "";

	var accumulatorBuilder = new StringBuilder(acc);
	string cur = null;
	string prev = null;
	foreach (var next in strings)
	{
		func(accumulatorBuilder, prev, cur, next);
		prev = cur;
		cur = next;
	}
	func(accumulatorBuilder, prev, cur, null);

	return accumulatorBuilder.ToString();
}

F# surely looks much better:

let rec reduce list =
    match list with
    | []          -> ""
    | head::curr::[]  -> head + " and " + curr
    | head::curr::tail  -> head + ", " + curr :: tail |> reduce
    | head::[] -> head

let concat list = "{" + (list |> reduce )  + "}"
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vote up 0 vote down
public static string CommaQuibbling(IEnumerable<string> items)
{
  int count = items.Count();
  string answer = string.Empty;
  return "{" + 
      (count==0)  ?  ""  :  
         (  items[0] + 
             (count == 1 ? "" :  
                 items.Range(1,count-1).
                     Aggregate(answer, (s,a)=> s += ", " + a) +
                 items.Range(count-1,1).
                     Aggregate(answer, (s,a)=> s += " AND " + a) ))+ "}";
}

It is implemented as,

if count == 0 , then return empty,
if count == 1 , then return only element,
if count > 1 , then take two ranges, 
   first 2nd element to 2nd last element
   last element
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vote up 0 vote down

I don't think that using a good old array is a restriction. Here is my version using an array and an extension method:

public static string CommaQuibbling(IEnumerable<string> list)
{
    string[] array = list.ToArray();

    if (array.Length == 0) return string.Empty.PutCurlyBraces();
    if (array.Length == 1) return array[0].PutCurlyBraces();

    string allExceptLast = string.Join(", ", array, 0, array.Length - 1);
    string theLast = array[array.Length - 1];

    return string.Format("{0} and {1}", allExceptLast, theLast)
                 .PutCurlyBraces();
}

public static string PutCurlyBraces(this string str)
{
    return "{" + str + "}";
}

I am using an array because of the string.Join method and because if the possibility of accessing the last element via an index. The extension method is here because of DRY.

I think that the performance penalities come from the list.ToArray() and string.Join calls, but all in one I hope that piece of code is pleasent to read and maintain.

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vote up 0 vote down

You can use a foreach, without LINQ, delegates, closures, lists or arrays, and still have understandable code. Use a bool and a string, like so:

public static string CommaQuibbling(IEnumerable items)
{
    StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder("{");
    bool empty = true;
    string prev = null;
    foreach (string s in items)
    {
    	if (prev!=null)
    	{
    		if (!empty) sb.Append(", ");
    		else empty = false;
    		sb.Append(prev);
    	}
    	prev = s;
    }
    if (prev!=null)
    {
    	if (!empty) sb.Append(" and ");
    	sb.Append(prev);
    }
    return sb.Append('}').ToString();
}
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vote up 0 vote down
public static string CommaQuibbling(IEnumerable<string> items)
{
   var itemArray = items.ToArray();

   var commaSeparated = String.Join(", ", itemArray, 0, Math.Max(itemArray.Length - 1, 0));
   if (commaSeparated.Length > 0) commaSeparated += " and ";

   return "{" + commaSeparated + itemArray.LastOrDefault() + "}";
}
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vote up 0 vote down

This isn't brilliantly readable, but it scales well up to tens of millions of strings. I'm developing on an old Pentium 4 workstation and it does 1,000,000 strings of average length 8 in about 350ms.

public static string CreateLippertString(IEnumerable<string> strings)
{
    char[] combinedString;
    char[] commaSeparator = new char[] { ',', ' ' };
    char[] andSeparator = new char[] { ' ', 'A', 'N', 'D', ' ' };

    int totalLength = 2;  //'{' and '}'
    int numEntries = 0;
    int currentEntry = 0;
    int currentPosition = 0;
    int secondToLast;
    int last;
    int commaLength= commaSeparator.Length;
    int andLength = andSeparator.Length;
    int cbComma = commaLength * sizeof(char);
    int cbAnd = andLength * sizeof(char);

    //calculate the sum of the lengths of the strings
    foreach (string s in strings)
    {
        totalLength += s.Length;
        ++numEntries;
    }

    //add to the total length the length of the constant characters
    if (numEntries >= 2)
        totalLength += 5;  // " AND "

    if (numEntries > 2)
        totalLength += (2 * (numEntries - 2)); // ", " between items

    //setup some meta-variables to help later
    secondToLast = numEntries - 2;
    last = numEntries - 1;

    //allocate the memory for the combined string
    combinedString = new char[totalLength];
    //set the first character to {
    combinedString[0] = '{';
    currentPosition = 1;

    if (numEntries > 0)
    {
        //now copy each string into its place
        foreach (string s in strings)
        {
            Buffer.BlockCopy(s.ToCharArray(), 0, combinedString, currentPosition * sizeof(char), s.Length * sizeof(char));
            currentPosition += s.Length;

            if (currentEntry == secondToLast)
            {
                Buffer.BlockCopy(andSeparator, 0, combinedString, currentPosition * sizeof(char), cbAnd);
                currentPosition += andLength;
            }
            else if (currentEntry == last)
            {
                combinedString[currentPosition] = '}'; //set the last character to '}'
                break;  //don't bother making that last call to the enumerator
            }
            else if (currentEntry < secondToLast)
            {
                Buffer.BlockCopy(commaSeparator, 0, combinedString, currentPosition * sizeof(char), cbComma);
                currentPosition += commaLength;
            }

            ++currentEntry;
        }
    }
    else
    {
        //set the last character to '}'
        combinedString[1] = '}';
    }

    return new string(combinedString);
}
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vote up 0 vote down

Here as a Python one liner


>>> f=lambda s:"{%s}"%", ".join(s)[::-1].replace(',','dna ',1)[::-1]
>>> f([])
'{}'
>>> f(["ABC"])
'{ABC}'
>>> f(["ABC","DEF"])
'{ABC and DEF}'
>>> f(["ABC","DEF","G","H"])
'{ABC, DEF, G and H}'

This version might be easier to understand


>>> f=lambda s:"{%s}"%" and ".join(s).replace(' and',',',len(s)-2)
>>> f([])
'{}'
>>> f(["ABC"])
'{ABC}'
>>> f(["ABC","DEF"])
'{ABC and DEF}'
>>> f(["ABC","DEF","G","H"])
'{ABC, DEF, G and H}'
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vote up -2 vote down

How about skipping complicated aggregation code and just cleaning up the string after you build it?

public static string CommaQuibbling(IEnumerable<string> items)    
{
    var aggregate = items.Aggregate<string, StringBuilder>(
        new StringBuilder(), 
        (b,s) => b.AppendFormat(", {0}", s));
    var trimmed = Regex.Replace(aggregate.ToString(), "^, ", string.Empty);
    return string.Format(
               "{{{0}}}", 
               Regex.Replace(trimmed, 
                   ", (?<last>[^,]*)$", @" and ${last}"));
}

UPDATED: This won't work with strings with commas, as pointed out in the comments. I tried some other variations, but without definite rules about what the strings can contain, I'm going to have real problems matching any possible last item with a regular expression, which makes this a nice lesson for me on their limitations.

link|flag
1  
Won't work if you aggregate strings with commas in them. A legit use for that would be a list of quoted phrases, e.g. {'Me and you', 'They' and 'He, she, and I'} – Pontus Gagge Apr 25 at 9:29
Thanks, updated with a version that supports your example. – MichaC Apr 25 at 10:04
Now, if the last string contains regexp-special characters (like '^' or '$') does it still work? I think no, but I haven't tried it. – Brian Apr 25 at 10:06
Sigh... I just thought of that myself. I need to give up on regular expressions for matching without definite rules about what the strings can contain. – MichaC Apr 25 at 10:21
vote up -2 vote down

I think Linq provides fairly readable code. This version handles a million "ABC" in .89 seconds:

using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;

namespace CommaQuibbling
{
    internal class Translator
    {
        public string Translate(IEnumerable<string> items)
        {
            return "{" + Join(items) + "}";
        }

        private static string Join(IEnumerable<string> items)
        {
            var leadingItems = LeadingItemsFrom(items);
            var lastItem = LastItemFrom(items);

            return JoinLeading(leadingItems) + lastItem;
        }

        private static IEnumerable<string> LeadingItemsFrom(IEnumerable<string> items)
        {
            return items.Reverse().Skip(1).Reverse();
        }

        private static string LastItemFrom(IEnumerable<string> items)
        {
            return items.LastOrDefault();
        }

        private static string JoinLeading(IEnumerable<string> items)
        {
            if (items.Any() == false) return "";

            return string.Join(", ", items.ToArray()) + " and ";
        }
    }
}
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I am curious, what are the reasons for the downvotes? What is it you don't like? – Thomas Eyde Apr 29 at 21:50

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